The best phone for Pokémon Go is iPhone. Get one to win.

Since Pokémon Go launched Raids last month, I've participated in well over a hundred. I've done several solo, but most have been in groups — sometimes up to 30 people at a time.

It's a really great, really cooperative and community-building experience. You see people from all teams working together, and with all phones. iPhone and Android. And you hear a lot of complaints. Mostly about Android.

Battling the battery

Battery life is one of the biggest complaints. It's not uncommon to see a half-dozen or more Android phone owners with cables running to the battery packs in their pockets or yelling for everyone to start because they're at 13% battery life and plummeting.

Losing to lag

Lag is another frequent complaint. Raids have countdown timers, and, when they go off, everyone is supposed to start together. It's not atypical for Android phone owners to start a few endless-feeling seconds later. Sometimes they're just delayed and find themselves stuck battling on when iPhone owners have finished. Other times they simply lose the time and don't get to contribute as much as everyone else.

In a large group that's not terminal. In a small group and especially solo, it can be the difference between winning and losing.

You often hear Android owners remind each other to reboot or restart the game before joining a Raid as well.

Driving the decision

More and more often these days, others players have been asking me about iPhone. Especially why I don't seem to be suffering from the same problems they are. And more and more, they're contemplating making the switch.

One player I met the other day was on his newish LG phone and his girlfriend was on her iPhone SE. He kept going on and on about how much faster, more reliable, and long-lasting her tiny phone was compared to his monster.

(It's also not uncommon for the hardcore players to complain about Poké Ball burn-in on their OLED displays — something I hope Apple manages to mitigate if the rumors are true about the upcoming iPhone 8 display.

The difference between winning and losing

None of this might sound like a big deal to some gamers right now, but with Legendary Raids and Player vs. Player on the horizon, it could become one and soon.

Especially for higher-level players. I saw this on Reddit earlier this morning. It's from a level 40 — currently the highest level in the game — player and his attempt to do one of the hardest challenges currently in the game: Solo a Flareon Raid.

Keys to success: [...] Using an iPhone - my Andriod phone (what I was recording my other phone with) is way laggier and starts the battle between 176 and 178 - I can't afford that missed time [...]

It's not just old Android vs. new iPhone, either. Even old iPhone seems to outperform new Android.

Andriods unfortunately performer worse for pokemon go. I have no idea why. I use a pixel and iPhone 6s. 6s destroys my pixel in terms of performance for this game. [sic]

To put that in context, Google's current flagship phone can't keep up with Apple's previous generation — or the game.

It's also not just Raid Battles. From a Reddit thread titled PoGo+ behavior is far inferior on Android compared to iOS:

The difference [between Android and iOS] is quite dramatic.

Whenever we do Megaloop in Toronto (http://imgur.com/ZThUDVF). Basically, a 5-minute loop where you spin 27 poke stops that are lured (we only do this during events and every sunday with a big group).

On average, we found that iPhones will catch 4 Pokemon more plus (sic) loop or about 48 Pokemon more per hour. As well be able to spin more stops.

For those not familiar with the game mechanics, 48 is a significant number, working out to a minimum of 144 candy and 4800 stardust — the stuff you need to evolve and power-up your Pokémon.

Time to switch

I tried Pokémon Go on my Pixel briefly and it was annoying after having used it on an iPhone 7 Plus. If I'd never played it on an iPhone, I'd just blame Pokémon Go developer Niantic for all the lag — and, yeah, they're responsible for an enormous amount of bugs and performance issues on both Android and iOS.

But having played it on iOS, both solo and in groups, it's wicked obvious that part of the blame also rests on Android.

And since you have no control over Niantic, all that's left is to exercise the control you do have over the phone you use.

Don't take my word for it, though. If you don't have an iPhone, see if you can borrow one from a friend, log into your Pokémon Go account, and give playing and Raiding a try.